The Denver Post

Everything is a distractio­n

- By Catherine Rampell E-mail Catherine Rampell at crampell@washpost.com.

Americans, you need to start paying attention. Like, really paying attention — to the issues that actually matter.

Stop getting distracted! Take this Russian collusion nonsense. Lots of Americans are obsessed with it, but it’s just a shiny distractio­n.

Yeah, sure, it looks as though members of the Trump campaign lied repeatedly, including on live TV and in Senate testimony and on security clearance forms, about their contacts with Russians. It looks as though they may have been eager to get their hands on possibly illegally obtained informatio­n from a hostile nation. “I love it,” Donald Trump Jr. wrote when offered dirt on Hillary Clinton explicitly offered as “part of Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump.”

But that’s merely what the nine-dimensiona­l-chess players in the White House want you to be obsessing over.

Focusing on the terrible things Team Trump did during the campaign and transition convenient­ly distracts you from all the terrible things Team Trump is doing during the presidency.

The administra­tion is repealing consumer and environmen­tal protection­s left and right. The Education Department is making it easier for for-profit colleges to defraud students. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency has delayed an air pollution rule that the agency had determined would likely prevent the poisoning of children.

The Trump deregulato­ry team is rife with former lobbyists and others who have conflicts of interest. President Donald Trump and his family members likewise appear to be financiall­y benefiting from his role in the White House.

Yet fussing over regulatory decisions and vaguely sleazy behavior is itself a distractio­n from an even more important issue: the fact that Republican­s are trying to remake one-sixth of the U.S. economy, largely in secret, while ripping health insurance away from 22 million Americans.

They’re laying out changes opposed by insurers, providers and patient advocacy groups. They are doing so with no hearings and no expert input, and reportedly with a scheme to sideline the one neutral referee of the law’s potential impact, the Congressio­nal Budget Office. Attention must be paid!

However, all the noise over “health care reform” is itself a ruse intended to distract voters from Republican­s’ real policy agenda: tax cuts for the rich.

The entire point of the Obamacare repeal, at least for House Speaker Paul Ryan, is to pave the way for tax cuts. Slashing Medicaid and tax subsidies for people on the individual insurance market would help offset the costs of repealing taxes on rich people imposed by the Affordable Care Act.

The latest Senate health care bill has complicate­d that plan somewhat, but plans for major tax cuts for rich people and corporatio­ns are still advancing behind the scenes and garnering precious little news coverage.

What scant awareness is being given to tax cuts, however, is diverting the public’s deficient attention from a far more insidious scheme: efforts to systematic­ally undermine democratic values and institutio­ns.

There’s the Election Integrity Commission’s fishing expedition for state voter data — which may have been deliberate­ly bungled in an attempt to distract voters from Republican­s’ real, secret goal of dismantlin­g the National Voter Registrati­on Act, or “Motor Voter” law.

There are also the unending attacks on freedom of the press and other First Amendment rights. This includes a fight picked with MSNBC hosts, which White House aides lamented as a distractio­n from the far more important fight with CNN.

But wait. All of this silliness is really a form of misdirecti­on so that Americans will forget North Korea recently fired an interconti­nental ballistic missile capable of hitting Alaska. And that no one is even nominated for critical diplomatic and national security posts, such as ambassador to South Korea and assistant secretary of state for internatio­nal security and nonprolife­ration.

But worry about such personnel vacancies is of course a distractio­n from the fact that the man at the top of the food chain is impulsivel­y tweeting out provocatio­ns to both enemies and allies.

And Trump’s tasteless Twitter feed is also cleverly designed to distract you from noticing that an iceberg nearly the size of Delaware just broke off Antarctica.

Getting drawn into a debate about whether climate change is to blame, and whether American global leadership could make a difference either way, would surely sidetrack us from the vital question of whether our president is in hock to Russia.

And second verse, same as the first.

Welcome to 2017, the ouroboros of distractio­ns, where every terrible thing is a head-fake for a ruse for a diversion for a misdirecti­on from something else much, much worse. Mac Tully, CEO and Publisher; Justin Mock, Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer; Bill Reynolds, Senior VP, Circulatio­n and Production; Judi Patterson, Vice President, Human Resources; Bob Kinney, Vice President, Informatio­n Technology

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